Showing posts with label Garlic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Garlic. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 12, 2025

Garden 2025 Update #7 - 2 Months of HEATWAVE Later

My garden updates are a fun little way for me to keep visual track of what's working for me (and what failed miserably! Because that's all a part of the gardening journey as well.) in the garden.  I share these publicly and just hope they bless you as much as they help me!

My last garden update was already 8 weeks ago in June, and 8 weeks into mid-summer things change rapidly!  Here are the way things are going for me after a really cold spring and cold early summer, then a crazy heat-wave that finally broke for a couple of days a month ago, and then sadly came raging right back!

 


Back in mid-June I built these window boxes on my garden cottage then planted English Daisies in them. I'm quite delighted with the way they turned out. πŸ’– 
I think next year I'll plant some mint, or basil, or some other edible herb in them. 


Out watering the garden one day and heard a rather loud conversation across the fence.  I see my neighbors have some rather adorable pool party guests. 😁


Loads of garlic scapes right on time in late June just before the 4th of July garlic harvest date. 
These are all diced & dried and used in my pantry stock of dried garlic for a variety of seasoning blends. You can also freeze them, use them in soup, stew or even summer salads. 


My cucumbers struggled considerably this year. A colder than usual spring, and colder than usual early summer created a most unpleasant result. I spoke to several local growers and we were all having the same experience. I finally picked up some seedlings in mid June and they've taken off quite well for the last 8 weeks. So far I've processed 3 batches of garlic dill pickles and it looks like batch #4 is coming this week and then they might be done with.  What you're seeing here is pine shaving mulch (pet bedding) that helps to regulate water retention in the soil, as well as the soil temperature.  This is my first year trying this method on cucumber vines and I have to say after 8 weeks, it's worked quite incredibly well.  Weed suppression was nearly 100% and that allowed the plants to really thrive without any weed pressure at all. I will definitely give this another go next year and see if the results are the same. πŸ‘ 
(Sources I've researched do say to skim the shavings off the soil surface at the end of the season and dispose with any other composting methods you're using for green/brown compost layers.)


My tomatoes haven't done well the last few years so this year I tried a new variety for my slicing tomatoes. This year it was Bonnie Best. You can't tell from this very early image but recently I sliced a ripe one and put it on my hamburger.  I never do that, but wanted to see how it held up.  
It tasted as if I 100% added sweet ketchup to my burger.  
I was considerably impressed, to say the least! 
I'll be adding this variety to my preferred list for next spring. 


Speaking of tomatoes... this year's cherry tomato variety was Chocolate Cherry.  It's been a rapid producer and the fruit is nothing short of incredible. Everyone in my family that has tried them is really impressed at how delicious they are.  It truly does have notes of chocolate, cherry, and tomato in every sweet bite. These are a keeper for sure and I'll be growing these from now on πŸ˜‹
The other cherry tomato variety I grew this year was Tiny Tim.  I've discovered I absolutely hate this plant,  πŸ˜‚ even though I love how well it produces.  The branches grow so close together it creates this really compact shrub that makes it nearly impossible to harvest fruit from. The fruit is sweet and lovely but you can get the same thing with a much less fussy plant.  I wont be growing this one again. 


I don't have an "official" drying/curing rack for my garlic or onions so, in this case, the metal cart is the go-to drying rack.  Once I layed all the garlic out I had to chuckle as it looked like something you might have seen on Gilligan's Island, in one of Mary Ann's huts. πŸ˜„

 This is just one of the many volunteer sunflowers came up in the garden this year.  
I staked them all up as needed, and the bees and butterflies loved them. πŸ’–


Okay so... no, this isn't garden related. 
It's a beautiful sign my sister Lora sent me that **immediately** had to be hung in my foyer. πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚
  BEST. SIGN. EVER.


Same bed as the earlier shot with the pine shavings. My local nursery's seedlings were quite strong and did incredibly well here.


Sometimes you just sit on the lawn swing and take in the view, and thank the Lord for His incredible mercy and grace, that allows you to have this. πŸ’–πŸ’–πŸ’–


My Chocolate Cherry tomatoes showing off with "you're not the boss of me!" stems falling off the side of the deck rail after a super windy day. Indeed I was not the boss of them, but I've let them be and have been harvesting off them for the last few weeks. πŸ˜€They are 100% the boss of me. 


It may not look like much, but this is my 2025 garlic harvest. 29 heads of garlic. Most will go into wee jars of raw honey infused garlic for cold and flu immune system aid & the rest will be dried and used for all sorts of homemade seasoning blends that include garlic powder. Since I started growing my own garlic in 2021 and learning how to dry it and process it , I haven't had to buy garlic powder from the store at all. It's he tiniest changes that make the biggest differences.  

All but one of the sunflowers in my garden this year, were 100% transplants.  The one that was intentionally planted was a winter sown plant as an experiment. 
It's now nearly 15 feet tall. (seen below).  
I will 100% attempt another round of winter sowing. 

Thanks for stopping by.  I hope you're encouraged by what you've read here, and if you have any thoughts or suggestions or questions please feel welcome to leave a comment. 😊



Saturday, November 2, 2024

Status Report: October 2024

Yep, it's already November 2nd.  All of this still applied in October though, and I'm really running behind lately πŸ˜„ so here's how things are going...

SITTING: Indoors, where it's warm. That will be the way it is for the next 6 months at least. I'll jazz it up a little with "sitting inside and the woodstove is going" over the winter but that's as about as adventuresome as we'll get until next spring.  To save on heating costs, I'll be using wood a lot more this year and I'm looking forward to that. Home just feels more homey, heated with wood. πŸ’–

BEEN BUSY WITH: Lots and lots of mulching leaves & covering all my raised beds & pathways, finishing putting summer things away, planting garlic (62 cloves went in today - to be harvested first week of July), moving the hot tub into the "winter spa" (aka, the garage) and getting that set up for the winter, and making lots and lots (and lots) of soup.  The last week of October has sort of become known as Soup Week around here.  Soup for dinner, soup for leftovers, soup to freeze and soup to freeze dry. I don't use a pressure canner but you could easily prep it this way as well, to stock up for the winter months. It's a really great way to use up all those veggies you've harvested all summer that are taking up freezer space. It's also a really good way to meal prep for the next few weeks and months where a hearty bown of homemade soup is on the menu on those chilly fall and winter days.  The last couple of weeks I've tucked away Cheesy Ham Chowder, Roasted Red Pepper Soup, Butternut Squash Soup, Loaded Baked Potato Soup & Creamy Tomato Soup. I think the young folks might call this "soup maxxing". 😊

FEELING: US presidential election fatigue. Big time.  I suspect everyone is feeling it, at least in part. Hoping for the best, either way. But I have to say, I'm not feeling very optimistic.  Since I believe God both raises up leaders and takes them down for His purposes and for His glory, and also ordains each leader put into place... I'm going to just keep reminding myself to trust in Him.  He knows what He's doing, even when we have no idea.

THINKING: about my grandpa McKinsey.  Tomorrow 11.03 would have been his 115th birthday. Ironically, my very first blog post at this blog (now archived) 20+ years ago, was all about my grandpa's ICU salvation story as told by my brother, a year before he passed & met Jesus face to face. I last saw him 32 years ago, a week before he left this earth. We joked about things like we always did, my kids ran over to him in his lazyboy chair and hugged him while he patted their wee heads then gave them each a piece of saltwater taffy candy he always seemed to magically produce from some bowl near his chair, and then we smiled as we left after a pleasant visit. One of the last things he said to me as we were leaving that day was that he decided he'd stick around at least until his birthday. He honored that and passed 6 days later. I will be forever grateful I have that last precious memory of my grandpa. 

LOOKING FORWARD TO: planning out Christmas baskets. Lots of kids, grandkids, in-laws, outlaws & jars of garden freshness to get all sorted out. From sauces, salsas, jams, jellies, fruits, pickled veggies & soups, there's a lot of goodies to get all organized in each family's basket. It's a labor of love I look forward to every year.  

13" Ryobi Push Mower
PLANNING: I've had this machine for a little while now and I've been planning to do a review of it once I found out how it held up to mulching 80 trillion fall leaves. 40 trillion (more or less) from my neighbor's Sugar Maple that fall into my yard, and 40 trillion (probably) from my King Crimson Maple. The Autumn leaf fall is about 80% over now, and I've used the machine several times to both mow and mulch, so I think I have a pretty good idea on how well this Ryobi 13" Push Lawn Mower works.  

The stand-alone review will be coming soon, with all the good stuff you need to know before you buy one of these battery operated gizmos from Ryobi. 

Well that wraps up this month's status report (which is really good since I'm technically 2 days behind).  Thanks for stopping by, and I hope you have an incredible, blessed and fantastic day. 😊

If you have any questions, please feel welcome to leave a comment. 

Monday, June 10, 2024

Garden 2024 Update #7

It's been rainy and windy and just overall ugly weather the last few weeks.  So much so that sadly I've lost half of my pickling cucumbers to swampy, wet soil.  I'm not clear on what's happened but the spot I've successfully grown cucumbers in for years now, has turnd into literal swampland with about an inch of standing water, when I dig down 6 inches or so. 

I've replaced the ones I've lost and planted them into 5 gallon grow bags, so we'll see how my cucumber harvest pans out this year. Garlic dills, sweet relish and bread and butter pickles are a must around here, so hopefully I can harvest enough for those 3 types.  

Some current pics of the garden:

Garlic scapes ready for harvesting, drying, and turning into garlic powder


Cherry Tomatoes



Sweet Red Roasting Peppers



The new meets the old green bean vines.  
A new variety for me this year sent to me by my sister, and they're called Scarlet Runner beans. 
Poor germination rate, and out of only 12 vines, only half have survived.  
Of those that have survived, they're doing fantastic!    




Not a view I share often, but after dark, my garden looks quite magical. 
I have a somewhat weird fascination with outdoor accent lighting 😊 
so solar lights are the way to go, if you only have one exterior outlet. 



Dutch Clover filling in nicely around all the rubber pavers.



Last year I had a grand total of 2 Honey Crisp apples on my new tree.  
This year I have a grand total of 6, so things are looking up, for sure! 

As always, I hope you're blessed and encouraged to start your own back yard food forest! 
Please feel welcome to leave a comment with any gardening questions you might have.